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CulturalHeritageOnline: Basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli

Basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli


The basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli is a Catholic place of worship in the historic center of Rome, located in the Monti district, on the Oppio hill; it is also called the Eudossian basilica from the name of the founder, Licinia Eudossia, and is known above all for hosting the tomb of Julius II with the famous Moses by Michelangelo Buonarroti. The basilica is a rectory entrusted by the canons regular of the Lateran Congregation of the Holy Savior and the homonymous title of cardinal insists on it.

The basilica was built in 442, at the Baths of Titus in the Esquiline, by Licinia Eudossia, daughter of Theodosius II and wife of Valentinian III on the site of a previous Christian cult indicated as titulus apostolorum.

From archaeological explorations carried out under the current basilica, the existence of an intricate urban complex, dating back to the third century, has been highlighted. B.C. and the third century. A.D., which stood on the western summit of the complex known as the Domus Transitoria neroniana, a Roman house consisting of a courtyard, a portico with a basin, a cryptoporticus and gardens.

The domus is perhaps datable to the fourth century. d. C. later a large apsidal hall was built. This complex was later demolished and in the second half of the 4th century, a spacious basilica-type church was built on the area dedicated to the Apostles, owned by the Presbyter Philip, Papal Legate appointed by Pope Celestine I at the Council of Ephesus (431) who in a writing mentions it with the name of Ecclesia Apostolorum. The church was destroyed for unknown reasons, but Filippo, with the intervention of Licinia Eudossia, had it rebuilt between 422 and 470, maintaining the same dimensions (28 meters wide and 60 meters long).

According to tradition, Elia Eudocia, mother of Eudoxia, during a trip to Palestine in 442, would have had as a gift from Juvenal Patriarch of Jerusalem the chains that would have bound St. Peter during his imprisonment in Jerusalem by order of Herod Agrippa. Elia Eudocia commissioned his daughter Licinia Eudossia to take them to Rome.

The tradition of the Church tells that Licinia Eudossia showed the chains of Peter to Pope Leo I, who brought them closer to those that belonged to Peter in the Mamertine Prison. The two chains merged irreversibly. In memory of the miracle, the Basilica which was to preserve them was built.

In those years, both the Empire and the Papacy were in great difficulty due to the continuous raids of barbarians who forced the borders of the empire even threatening Rome.

The miracle of the conjunction of the chains, one coming from the East and one from the West, thus assumed a great symbolic and political significance, they had to demonstrate a strong bond between the two empires and perhaps a never realized will of reunification, willed and blessed by God.

The consecration of a basilica took place already in 439 during the pontificate of Pope Sixtus III. Subsequently it underwent many restorations, the most important, made by Hadrian I in 780, by Sixtus IV in 1471 and by Julius II in 1503. Other restorations were carried out in the 18th and 19th centuries.

Pope John II and Gregory VII would be named in the church.

The current architecture of the church dates back to the restoration of Julius II, with the entrance portico, and the renovation of the adjoining convent. The original design of the cloister, which has recently been restored (photo), is attributed by Vasari to Giuliano da Sangallo.

The convent building was used, after the unification of Italy, as the seat of the Faculty of Engineering of Sapienza. The central well, made by Simone Mosca in 1517, is decorated with masks and inserted between four trabeated columns (the design is attributed to Antonio da Sangallo the Younger), is the symbol of the Faculty of Engineering. Also in the courtyard, a fountain from 1642, a gift from Cardinal Antonio Barberini.



Basilica of San Pietro in Vincoli
Address: Piazza di San Pietro in Vincoli, 4/a, 00184
Phone: +39 06 97844952
Site: www.vicariatusurbis.org

Location inserted by CHO.earth

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